Scaffold In The Scarlet Letter

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The Significance of the Scaffold
There are three scenes in The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne that showcase the development of the characters and the novel and all occur in the center of the town square on the scaffold. The scaffold unites Hester Prynne, Arthur Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingworth to provide structure and framework for the novel. The motivation and characters are established in the first scaffold scene, the second scaffold scene establishes the character development, and the third scaffold scene provides resolution.
The first scaffold scene sets the course for the rest of the novel with the public humiliation of Hester Prynne, Dimmesdale’s refusal to admit his guilt to the public, and the beginning of Chillingworth’s plot to punish Hester and her fellow adulterer. Hester Prynne is a symbol of sin and shame in …show more content…

Dimmesdale's health becomes more sickly and weak as the guilt of his sin eats away at him, while Chillingworth acts as a sort of diabolical counselor, digging deep into Dimmesdale's soul to torture him ruthlessly. In the second scaffold scene, Dimmesdale makes a feeble attempt to confess his sin. He stands upon the scaffold bearing the “A” craved into his bare chest and he Hester and Pearl pass on their way home from the governor calls them up to stand with him on the scaffold in the dead of night. Critics say “this episode of Gothic horror forms the pivot of the novel, a mockery of confession in which the characters are utterly isolated from their society” (Bloom 1). The only one to witness this act of penance from Dimmesdale is Chillingworth; of whose suspicions of Dimmesdale’s guilt are confirmed, and can use this information to continue his plan of

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